Bestselling mystery novelist Sue Grafton has died at age 77, just a few months after publishing her final novel, Y is for Yesterday, the 25th installment in her "alphabet series" about Detective Kinsey Millhone. She began the series in 1982 with the publication of A is for Alibi and she intended to conclude the series with her "Z" book: Z is for Zero, which was due to be released in fall of 2019. Unfortunately, she passed away from cancer before she could finish it. These quotes by Sue Grafton from her beloved Kinsey Millhone exemplify what a talented, magnificent mystery writer she was in her lifetime.

Clark wrote in the statement that her mother was “adamant that her books would never be turned into movies or TV shows, and in that same vein, she would never allow a ghost writer to write in her name. Because of all of those things, and out of the deep abiding love and respect for our dear sweet Sue, as far as we in the family are concerned, the alphabet now ends at Y.”

Though fans of Grafton will never get a "Z" novel, they can still appreciate the wonderful books she left behind. Here are 25 quotes from her alphabet series to remember her by:

"I don’t know what love is about and I’m not sure I believe in it anyway."

"This is the beauty of keeping up those skills. In a crisis situation, I had only to open my mouth and a fib flopped out. An unpracticed liar can’t always rise to the occasion like I can."

"“Ghosts don't haunt us. That's not how it works. They're present among us because we won't let go of them."

"If we understood the consequences of any given action, we could exercise discretion, thus restructuring our fate. Time, of course, only runs in one direction, and it seems to do so in an orderly progression. Here in the blank and stony present, we're shielded from the knowledge of the dangers that await us, protected from future horrors through blind innocence."

"So much of the past in encapsulated in the odds and ends. Most of us discard more information about ourselves than we ever care to preserve. Our recollection of the past is not simply distorted by our faulty perception of events remembered but skewed by those forgotten. The memory is like twin orbiting stars, one visible, one dark, the trajectory of what's evident forever affected by the gravity of what's concealed."

"The Universe keeps track of our sins and exacts devious and repugnant punishments, like dates with unknown men."

"He might be a man without character, but she was a woman without courage. Of the two, which was worse?"

"You can’t save others from themselves because those who make a perpetual muddle of their lives don’t appreciate your interfering with the drama they’ve created. They want your poor-sweet-baby sympathy, but they don’t want to change."

"If I'd been listening closely, I'd have caught the sound of the gods having a great big old tee-hee at my expense."

"Built into bad news is that sense of profound disbelief. The mind struggles to absorb the bare facts, defending itself against the larger implications."

"There's something inherent in human nature that has us constructing narratives to explain a world that is otherwise chaotic and opaque. Life is little more than a series of overlapping stories about who we are, where we came from, and how we struggle to survive. What we call news isn't news at all: wars, murders, famines, plagues—death in all its forms. It's folly to assign meaning to every chance event, yet we do it all the time."